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Carney should have consulted Grit caucus before supporting U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran, say some Liberal MPs: ‘what the hell’

Carney should have consulted Grit caucus before supporting U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran, say some Liberal MPs: ‘what the hell’

Some Liberal MPs told The Hill Times that Prime Minister Mark Carney should have consulted his caucus before declaring Canada's support for the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran. But B.C. Liberal MP Parm Bains says he's received positive feedback from Iranian-Canadians in his riding. Prime Minister Mark Carney declared his support for the deadly American-Israeli attack on Iran shortly after it...

Federal Liberal government has proposed a debate on Iran war, House leader says

Federal Liberal government has proposed a debate on Iran war, House leader says

Liberal House leader Steven MacKinnon says Prime Minister Mark Carney's government has proposed to debate the turmoil in the Middle East on Monday evening, following a weekend meeting of ministers that discussed the issue. Steven MacKinnon, who is also transport minister, said in a Sunday post on X the government has proposed to opposition parties that a debate on the...

Liberals by 15 and the Prairies are in play.

Liberals by 15 and the Prairies are in play.

Wide leads in Quebec, Ontario, Atlantic and BC. But the numbers have tightened, a lot, in Alberta and Saskatchewan. PM Carney's travels to market Canada is one reason why. In an election held now, 46% would cast a ballot for the Carney Liberals, and 31% say they would vote for Poilievre’s Conservatives. The Liberals have opened up a large lead...

Carney calls byelections in Quebec riding of Terrebonne, 2 Toronto ridings

Carney calls byelections in Quebec riding of Terrebonne, 2 Toronto ridings

Liberals will need to win all 3 races to secure thin majority government. Prime Minister Mark Carney has called byelections in the Toronto ridings of University-Rosedale and Scarborough Southwest and the Quebec riding of Terrebonne — races the Liberals will want to win to secure a thin majority government. The byelections will be held on April 13, according to a...

Crude oil prices spike near US$120 a barrel as the Iran war impedes production and shipping

Crude oil prices spike near US$120 a barrel as the Iran war impedes production and shipping

Oil prices spiked near $120 per barrel before falling back Monday as the Iran war intensified, threatening production and shipping in the Middle East and pummeling financial markets. The price for a barrel of Brent crude, the international standard, surged to $119.50 per barrel early in the day but later was trading at $107.80 per barrel. West Texas Intermediate, the...

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The Leadership Question at the Heart of Canadian Politics

The Leadership Question at the Heart of Canadian Politics

Over the past year, one of the more revealing questions in Canadian politics hasn’t simply been who people support, but what kind of leadership they believe the country needs. When voters talk about politics today, they often focus on policy problems like housing, affordability, or economic growth. But underneath those debates is something more psychological. Leadership is not evaluated in...

Federal Tracker: Liberals Lead by 14

Federal Tracker: Liberals Lead by 14

A new national survey from Liaison Strategies shows the federal Liberals have established a significant 14-point lead over the Conservatives among decided and leaning voters with 44% support. The Weekly Federal Tracker shows the Conservatives in second place at 30%, followed by the NDP at 9%, the Bloc Québécois at 6%, and the People’s Party at 4%. Liaison surveyed a...



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Carney has a hard time explaining Canada’s position towards India

Carney has a hard time explaining Canada’s position towards India

TORONTO—For the last week or two, any time the federal government has tried to explain what this country’s position actually is towards India, we haven’t come off looking great. There is a very simple explanation for this incoherence, but there is also a more alarming one, and I think that one is worth spending a minute thinking about. First, let’s...

Poilievre can't quit his climate denying bots.

Poilievre can't quit his climate denying bots.

After a few days of plaudits for sounding more mainstream, Poilievre reminds everyone he is a climate denier, and lacks an understanding of the global marketplace. The Trump administration has dented, but not ended, the drive towards emissions reduction. Capital investments in energy were expected to hit $3.3 trillion in 2025. Of every 3 dollars invested, 2 were going to...

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Library and Archives planning deep cuts to access to information team, document shows

Library and Archives planning deep cuts to access to information team, document shows

Library and Archives Canada is planning deep cuts to its access to information division that will put at risk its ability to comply with access and privacy laws, the department has acknowledged in a document. The archives, or LAC, is the central storing house for historical records from across the federal government and is widely used by researchers and journalists...

Treasury Board not tracking impact of public service job cuts on equity groups

Treasury Board not tracking impact of public service job cuts on equity groups

Advocates are raising concerns about how job cuts will affect public servants in equity groups -- something the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat says it's not tracking. The federal government has committed to cutting the number of public service jobs by about 40,000 from a 2023-24 peak of 368,000 as it looks to find savings. Departments and agencies across the...

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Ontario — the world’s reliable partner

Ontario — the world’s reliable partner

This week, the world will converge in Toronto for the annual Prospectors & Developers Association of Canada (PDAC) convention, the largest mining conference in the world. At a moment defined by geopolitical instability, fractured supply chains, and surging demand for critical minerals, Ontario is emerging as the world’s reliable partner.

The only thing harder than winning an Olympic Gold Medal is defending one


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Carney’s jarring, bloodless, defensive response to Trump’s war on Iran

Carney’s jarring, bloodless, defensive response to Trump’s war on Iran

Prime Minister Mark Carney’s response to war in the Middle East has so far seemed hasty, morally queasy, intellectually convoluted and—attempts at clarification, notwithstanding—continues to be deeply disappointing to many Canadians. His first statement, within hours of the beginning of hostilities, stopped just short of full-throated support for the United States-Israeli campaign, surprising from a prime minister who lectured the...

PM Carney was right to walk back support for a war with no exit strategy

PM Carney was right to walk back support for a war with no exit strategy

In the world of global diplomacy, the distance between a targeted mission and a regional conflict is often measured in days. For those of us who have lived and worked in the Middle East, watching the current escalation is not just a matter of tracking headlines. It is a visceral experience. My stomach is in knots because I know what...

Do Carney and Poilievre have different visions for the Canada-U.S. relationship?

Do Carney and Poilievre have different visions for the Canada-U.S. relationship?

The clearest attempt at a line of demarcation during Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre's speech on Canada-United States relations was an apparent rejoinder to Prime Minister Mark Carney's insistence that a "rupture" has occurred. Quoting a John F. Kennedy hymn about the geography, history, economics and necessity that have brought Canada and the U.S. ever closer, Poilievre said the former president's...

Pierre Poilievre plants the seeds of an alternative to the Carney doctrine
Canada must support international accountability for Iran
New analysis: industrial carbon pricing will cost just a Timbit per barrel for  Canada’s oil sands sector


Why is Canada elbows-up to Trump, but arms-out for Xi and Modi?
Trump’s war in Iran shows Carney has lots to learn about the new world order — one thing most of all

Trump’s war in Iran shows Carney has lots to learn about the new world order — one thing most of all

More than two decades ago, the United States invited Canada to join in a new Middle Eastern misadventure. The invitation was premised on a big lie about Saddam Hussein’s supposed weapons of mass destruction. Prime Minister Jean Chrétien declined to participate. It’s not that he foresaw the disaster to come — but he had a team of good advisers, as...

Carney has my sympathy as he tries to navigate a war led by Trump and Hegseth

Carney has my sympathy as he tries to navigate a war led by Trump and Hegseth

I’ve covered a few wars, in the Balkans and the Middle East, and I’ve seen plenty of military officers (including senior Americans) explain how things are unfolding on the battlefield. In my experience they’re invariably professional, cool and calm. What they’re not is what the U.S. “secretary of war,” Pete Hegseth, displayed this week in a couple of briefings on...

Polls show why Conservatives don't want an election right now - Liberals leading in most parts of the country and in every demographic group

Polls show why Conservatives don't want an election right now - Liberals leading in most parts of the country and in every demographic group

Liberals leading in most parts of the country and in every demographic group. When you hear that Pierre Poilievre and the Conservatives don’t want an election anytime soon, it might be due to the polling.

Mark Carney ties his own foreign policy in knots

Mark Carney ties his own foreign policy in knots

Let’s peek in on Mark Carney’s Iran war foreign-policy update, beamed to us all the way from Australia. Mr. Carney supported U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran in a statement issued Saturday, and he still does, now in a different way, because the U.S and Israel probably did not act in keeping with international law, which is unfortunately part of...

After shackling Canada to Trump’s war in Iran, Carney’s course correction is wise

After shackling Canada to Trump’s war in Iran, Carney’s course correction is wise

Few decisions are more important for a Canadian prime minister than whether to support the United States on matters of war and peace. With such decisions, legacies can be made and unmade. Jean Chrétien offers a prime example. He’s been dining out on his refusal to join George W. Bush’s coalition of the willing in the Iraq war for decades...



Mark Carney reveals why a personal touch is needed when dealing with the world’s most powerful leaders

Mark Carney reveals why a personal touch is needed when dealing with the world’s most powerful leaders

No one will accuse Mark Carney of being a populist politician. But as he nears the one-year mark as prime minister, we’ve been getting some insights into how Carney is juggling the personal relations he has to manage on the world stage and also at home. It isn’t often that politicians go into that kind of detail, so Carney’s lessons...

Canada’s small military is a big problem for Carney. It’s also doing him a big favour right now

Canada’s small military is a big problem for Carney. It’s also doing him a big favour right now

In almost any context, one of Prime Minister Mark Carney’s major problems — and it’s one that he inherited, in fairness to him — is the state of the Canadian Armed Forces. Our military is too small to do all the jobs we need it to do. It lacks critical capabilities necessary for survival on the modern battlefield. Manpower shortages...

Pierre Poilievre’s great reset

Pierre Poilievre’s great reset

After a humiliating election defeat, multiple defections from his caucus and a widening lead in the polls for Mark Carney’s Liberals, Pierre Poilievre has finally decided to make some changes. He debuted the new look at a recent speech at the Economic Club of Canada, one in which he cited the writings of Marcus Aurelius, name-checked Pierre Trudeau in a...

Game Theory vs. ‘Death and Destruction’: Mark Carney’s Trumpian Dilemma

Game Theory vs. ‘Death and Destruction’: Mark Carney’s Trumpian Dilemma

One of the many things that could be said of the rules-based world order is that it was designed so that countries — including middle powers — would not have to rely on their wits, in the manner of a Hobbesian geopolitical Hunger Games, to survive in the face of hegemonic aggression. “The world will always be driven by great...

The path to energy security now runs through electrification
Trump’s Consequential War

Trump’s Consequential War

I begin writing today with a quotation from Secretary of War Pete Hegseth. In a press conference Monday morning, Hegseth celebrated Israel and its strikes alongside the U.S., while he condemned “so many of our traditional allies who wring their hands and clutch their pearls, hemming and hawing about the use of force.” In explaining the Trump doctrine of military...



B.C.’s Eby may not be long for the job

B.C.’s Eby may not be long for the job

The premier won’t have time to turn the economy around as the prospect of an election this year looms large. Spare a moment, if you will, for British Columbia Premier David Eby. Not long ago, the former Vancouver lawyer seemed to have it in the bag. He inherited the premiership and a budget surplus of $5.7-billion from the popular John...

There are lessons for Poilievre and Carney in U.K. byelection

There are lessons for Poilievre and Carney in U.K. byelection

Pierre Poilievre, leader of His Majesty’s loyal opposition, is visiting the King’s home turf this week, where he gave a keynote speech at Margaret Thatcher’s think tank of choice. The visit comes at a good time for Poilievre to open his ears as well as his mouth. For the United Kingdom is deep into a period of political turmoil, one...

OpenAI's deal with Trump is putting Canadians at risk too

OpenAI's deal with Trump is putting Canadians at risk too

In a stunning showdown last week between the Trump administration and frontier AI company Anthropic, US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth demanded that Anthropic allow its AI models to be used for “any lawful purpose,” without any restrictions. Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei refused and laid out the company’s two red lines for its models’ usage by the US government: barring...

Why even Iraq war hawks should oppose this war

Why even Iraq war hawks should oppose this war

When president George H.W. Bush went to war against Iraq in 1991, he sought and won the consent of the Congress of the United States. Resolutions authorizing military force passed the House, by a margin of 250 to 183, and the Senate, 52-47. Mr. Bush had earlier secured the passage of United Nations Security Council Resolution 678. The cause was...

Hope for the pipeline deal to survive a clash over carbon taxes

Hope for the pipeline deal to survive a clash over carbon taxes

Back at the end of November when Prime Minister Mark Carney and Premier Danielle Smith signed their memorandum of understanding (MOU), it was presented as the best of all possible worlds: Canada would get a new oil pipeline and reduced carbon emissions.

Canadians deserve to know if our military is helping the U.S. attack on Iran

Canadians deserve to know if our military is helping the U.S. attack on Iran

Canadian Forces exchange officers working with the U.S. military were “very likely” involved at some level in planning the weekend strikes on Iran, a former Canada major-general has warned. If true, this should raise alarm bells for Canadians because it means Ottawa’s insistence that Canada is “not involved” in this operation is not just implausible, it’s misleading.

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Voting begins for new federal NDP leader

Voting begins for new federal NDP leader

New Democrat membership hits 100k as race to replace Jagmeet Singh culminates with convention March 29. New Democrats can begin casting their vote online and by mail today for a new federal leader, with five candidates vying for the job to replace Jagmeet Singh. The NDP says its membership has increased to approximately 100,000 people, up from 60,000 in September...

Most Canadians want former prince Andrew removed from line to throne: poll

Most Canadians want former prince Andrew removed from line to throne: poll

A majority of Canadians say they want Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor removed from the line of succession to the British throne, a new poll shows. The poll, released Monday by Angus Reid Institute, shows an overwhelming 84 per cent of Canadians say they are in support of the move. The survey was conducted online from Feb. 24 to 26 among a randomized...

Iran names Mojtaba Khamenei to succeed his father as supreme leader and Saudi sharpens warning

Iran names Mojtaba Khamenei to succeed his father as supreme leader and Saudi sharpens warning

Saudi Arabia sharpened its warnings to Iran early Monday, telling Tehran it would be the "biggest loser" if it continues to attack Arab states. The Saudi statement came after a new drone attack apparently targeted its massive Shaybah oil field. The kingdom dismissed comments by Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian on Saturday that Iran had halted its attacks on Gulf Arab...

‘We will not tolerate it’: Police promise relentless probe into GTA synagogue shootings

‘We will not tolerate it’: Police promise relentless probe into GTA synagogue shootings

Police and political leaders gathered outside a North York synagogue Sunday morning, vowing a “relentless” investigation and stronger protections for Jewish communities after gunfire struck two GTA locations this weekend. The update came just over 24 hours after bullets tore through the front doors of Shaarei Shomayim synagogue near Bathurst Street and Glencairn Avenue. The incident was one of two...

LeBlanc, Michel meet with pharma sector as U.S. buckles down on cutting drug prices

LeBlanc, Michel meet with pharma sector as U.S. buckles down on cutting drug prices

United States President Donald Trump’s efforts to reset how pharmaceutical firms negotiate drug prices with his government—and the consequences for countries including Canada—were recently discussed at an in-person meeting between pharmaceutical representatives, Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc, Health Minister Marjorie Michel, and Janice Charette, the newly appointed chief trade negotiator to the U.S.

Debate over a foreign spy service for Canada influenced by allies, money: study

Debate over a foreign spy service for Canada influenced by allies, money: study

The decades-long debate over whether Canada should create a CIA-style foreign spy agency has been coloured by pressure from allies, budgetary restraint and internal federal rivalries, a new study reveals Much of the discussion about Canada's foreign intelligence aspirations has taken place -- fittingly perhaps, given the subject matter -- in classified memos and behind closed doors in the halls...

Greenlanders should still worry about Trump's designs on their island, Governor General says

Greenlanders should still worry about Trump's designs on their island, Governor General says

It's clear U.S. president still wants territory due to its 'geopolitical location': Gov. Gen. Mary Simon. Although U.S. President Donald Trump's interest in taking over Greenland appears to have faded — at least publicly — Canada's Governor General says concern remains that the fight over the semi-autonomous territory isn't over yet. "Even though the threat has kind of gone to...

Critics say Ottawa's sustainable jobs plan offers no new support for energy workers

Critics say Ottawa's sustainable jobs plan offers no new support for energy workers

Plan formerly known as 'just transition' limited to previously announced policies. The Carney government's plan to protect jobs in the energy sector amounts to a list of existing policies that critics say aren't focused enough on those at risk of losing work. Previously called the 'just transition,' the new federal sustainable jobs action plan offers little in the way of...

U.S. customs searched a record number of electronic devices last year

U.S. customs searched a record number of electronic devices last year

Recently revised directive adds flash drives, smart watches to searchable devices. United States customs officers conducted a record number of searches of electronic devices last year of people travelling to the U.S., and a recent update to its directives adds new devices such as smart watches, SIM cards and flash drives to the list of things subject to search. Officers...

Sask. Premier Moe urges separation of trade and national security in talks with India

Sask. Premier Moe urges separation of trade and national security in talks with India

Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe says Canada needs to separate its trade talks from its national security concerns when dealing with certain countries if it is serious about diversifying trading partners beyond the United States. Moe joined Prime Minister Mark Carney this week on the first leg of his Indo-Pacific trade tour to India, Australia and Japan. In India, Carney signed...

The Honourable Rechie Valdez is set to lead Canada at the 70th session of the UNCSW

The Honourable Rechie Valdez is set to lead Canada at the 70th session of the UNCSW

Valdez, Canada's Minister for Women and Gender Equality, will highlight Ottawa's commitment to gender equality and share best practices with international partners. This year's priority theme for the session of the United Nations Commission on the Status of Women focuses on strengthening access to justice for women and girls through inclusive legal systems and the removal of discriminatory laws and...

Gap narrows in Alberta as federal Conservatives shed some support to Liberals: poll

Gap narrows in Alberta as federal Conservatives shed some support to Liberals: poll

Edmonton driving the numbers, according to Abacus Data. The Conservative Party continues to hold the majority favour in what tends to be reliably-blue Alberta, but it has lost some support to the gain of the Liberals, according to a new poll. The Abacus Data poll suggests the Conservatives boast a 51-per-cent share of the intended vote in the province. That...

A Canadian Lawmaker, and Friend of JD Vance, Channels Charlie Kirk

A Canadian Lawmaker, and Friend of JD Vance, Channels Charlie Kirk

Jamil Jivani, a Conservative rookie member of Parliament, follows an American playbook to win over young men on college campuses. Jamil Jivani, a Canadian lawmaker who bonded with JD Vance at Yale Law School and delivered a Bible reading at his wedding, arrived at the University of Calgary on a recent winter evening — the latest stop on his tour...

Why some in the federal NDP fear they are on the verge of being wiped out in Quebec

Why some in the federal NDP fear they are on the verge of being wiped out in Quebec

Some New Democrats are worried the party could be wiped out in Quebec as its only MP in the province signals a possible exit, sources say. With Montreal-area MP Alexandre Boulerice “seriously” considering a jump to provincial politics, Quebec New Democrats fear they may not be able to hold on to the Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie seat he’s held since 2011, according...

Liberals move to end Conservative filibuster over religious exemption to hate speech laws

Liberals move to end Conservative filibuster over religious exemption to hate speech laws

The Liberals are taking steps to halt debate on their flagship anti-hate bill in committee to end a prolonged Conservative filibuster on removing a religious exemption to some hate speech laws. Conservatives have said they have been inundated with expressions of concern from religious leaders who fear Bill C-9 would limit religious freedom if it becomes law. But the Liberals...

As Carney seeks strengthened global alliances, is it time Canada join the EU?

As Carney seeks strengthened global alliances, is it time Canada join the EU?

New polling shows just under half of Canadians support the idea, but there are costs. Since taking office, Prime Minister Mark Carney has made his desire to cut Canada's economic dependence on the United States crystal clear. And along the way, he's referenced Europe as a top destination for Canadian goods. "As the most European of the non-European countries, Canada...

Canada has not received requests for military support from Gulf allies, Carney says

Canada has not received requests for military support from Gulf allies, Carney says

Prime Minister Mark Carney said Canada has not yet received requests from Persian Gulf states for military aid to help them defend against attacks from Iran. And, he suggested, these requests might not arrive. The Prime Minister spoke to journalists in Tokyo near the end of a two-day visit to Japan. Earlier this week, Canada’s Chief of the Defence Staff...

Social media ban for kids under consideration in online harms bill: Carney

Social media ban for kids under consideration in online harms bill: Carney

TOKYO -- While there should be "debate" in Canada about a social media ban for children, Prime Minister Mark Carney says he has not made up his own mind on the issue yet.

Carney calls for Mountbatten-Windsor's removal from line of succession

Carney calls for Mountbatten-Windsor's removal from line of succession

Prime Minister Mark Carney says Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor should be removed from the royal line of succession for his "deplorable" actions. Speaking to reporters in Tokyo, Carney says the actions that have caused him to be stripped of his royal titles "necessitate" his removal from the line of succession.

The awkward truth dogging USMCA talks: 'They just hate Canada.'

The awkward truth dogging USMCA talks: 'They just hate Canada.'

One year into the trade war, Canadians are feeling more patriotic and more convinced the United States is a worse place under Donald Trump. And as the president dangles the fate of North American free trade above a wood chipper, a split has emerged between business leaders worried about bottom lines and Canadians who are simply over the president’s provocations...

Ottawa, Alberta reach prospective agreement to streamline major project assessments

Ottawa, Alberta reach prospective agreement to streamline major project assessments

Ottawa and Alberta have reached a prospective deal that they say will see major projects be approved more efficiently. In a joint announcement Friday the two governments said the deal will bring a "one project, one review" approach to addressing the broader impacts of these projects, including on the environment. A draft version of the deal says projects that fall...

LeBlanc meets U.S. trade czar in Washington as Ottawa looks ahead to CUSMA review

LeBlanc meets U.S. trade czar in Washington as Ottawa looks ahead to CUSMA review

Canada-U.S. Trade Minister Dominic LeBlanc sat down with President Donald Trump's trade czar in Washington on Friday as Ottawa continued preparations for a review of the critical continental trade pact. LeBlanc's office said the meeting with United States Trade Representative Jamieson Greer included discussions of the upcoming mandatory review of the Canada-U.S.-Mexico Agreement on trade, known as CUSMA, as well...

Anand: U.S., Israel have 'no blank cheque' in Iran and are bound by international law

Anand: U.S., Israel have 'no blank cheque' in Iran and are bound by international law

The United States and Israel do not have a "blank cheque" in their bombing campaign in Iran, and are still bound by international law, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said on Friday, as the war in the Middle East approaches the seven-day mark.

Chartered flights and buses helping to get Canadians out of the Middle East: Anand

Chartered flights and buses helping to get Canadians out of the Middle East: Anand

Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said Friday a chartered flight is set to take 180 Canadians fleeing the Middle East war zone from Dubai to Istanbul on Saturday. Anand said the flight will operate on a cost-recovery basis. The government has also block-booked about 50 seats each on a few Air Arabia flights for Canadians travelling from Dubai to Istanbul.

Good Talk -- Canada, Carney and The Iran War

Good Talk -- Canada, Carney and The Iran War

Within hours of the US and Israeli attack on Iran and the assassination of that country's leader, Mark Carney was out with his initial thoughts on the conflict. Since then there's been some clarification on what he meant but there's also been some concern in Liberal circles. Chantal and Bruce have their thoughts on this and a lot more on...

Gulf allies complain US didn't notify them of Iran attacks and ignored their warnings, sources say

Gulf allies complain US didn't notify them of Iran attacks and ignored their warnings, sources say

The Trump administration is confronting mounting discontent from allies in the Persian Gulf who have complained they were not given adequate time to prepare for the torrent of Iranian drones and missiles bombarding their countries in retaliation for strikes launched by the U.S. and Israel. Officials from two Gulf countries said their governments were disappointed in the way the U.S...

Canada launches new program to grant 33,000 foreign workers permanent residence, immigration minister reveals

Canada launches new program to grant 33,000 foreign workers permanent residence, immigration minister reveals

Ottawa has soft-launched a promised program to transition current work permit holders to permanent residence, as soaring numbers of migrants are running out of status in Canada, says Immigration Minister Lena Metlege Diab.

Ottawa office market experts left in the dark over feds' return-to-work needs

Ottawa office market experts left in the dark over feds' return-to-work needs

Ottawa real estate watchers are calling on the federal government to be more clear about its workspace needs as public servants prepare to spend more time in the office. Landlords and office brokers want to know whether the federal government is going to need more space to accommodate ramped-up return-to-office plans after years of stated plans to consolidate its office...

In Tokyo, Carney signs agreement with Japanese counterpart to expand trade and defence ties

In Tokyo, Carney signs agreement with Japanese counterpart to expand trade and defence ties

PM meets with his Japanese counterpart, automakers while in Tokyo for a day Prime Minister Mark Carney inked a series of agreements with his Japanese counterpart Friday designed to expand and “modernize” the bilateral relationship as he continues his push to develop deeper ties to like-minded countries in the Indo-Pacific — now that the Canada-U.S. relationship is on shaky ground...

Liberal MPs to hold call Friday as caucus raises concerns about Carney's shifting Iran position

Liberal MPs to hold call Friday as caucus raises concerns about Carney's shifting Iran position

MPs have reservations about PM's initial statement supporting U.S.-Israel strikes. Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand is set to brief Liberal MPs on Friday morning about the government's position on the war that has now engulfed Iran and surrounding countries in the Middle East, after some both privately and publicly raised concerns about Prime Minister Mark Carney's initial statement regarding the...



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Trump's 'roaring' economy meets a rough start to 2026: What the latest numbers show

Trump's 'roaring' economy meets a rough start to 2026: What the latest numbers show

WASHINGTON (AP) -- President Donald Trump promised that 2026 would be a bumper year for economic growth, but instead it has kicked off with job losses, rising gasoline prices and more uncertainty about America's future.

SK lays off nearly 1,000 workers at Georgia plant amid cooling automaker EV plans

ATLANTA (AP) -- Battery company SK Battery America Inc. laid off nearly 1,000 workers at a manufacturing plant northeast of Atlanta on Friday amid automakers' changing electrification plans and uncertain consumer demand for EVs.

Trump rules out talks absent Iran's 'unconditional surrender' as Israel strikes Lebanon

Trump rules out talks absent Iran's 'unconditional surrender' as Israel strikes Lebanon

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- Israeli warplanes pounded Beirut and Tehran on Friday as Iran launched another wave of retaliatory strikes against Israel and Gulf countries. There was no sign of the war letting up on its seventh day, as U.S. President Donald Trump appeared to rule out negotiations with Iran and called for its "unconditional surrender."

Israeli warplanes pound Tehran and Beirut as the US vows a surge in its strikes on Iran

Israeli warplanes pound Tehran and Beirut as the US vows a surge in its strikes on Iran

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates (AP) -- Israeli warplanes pounded Beirut and Tehran on Friday as Iran launched another wave of retaliatory strikes against Israel and Gulf countries. There was no sign of the war letting up on its seventh day, as Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth warned the U.S. air campaign against Iran would "surge dramatically."

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Crude oil prices spike near US$120 a barrel as the Iran war impedes production and shipping

Crude oil prices spike near US$120 a barrel as the Iran war impedes production and shipping

Oil prices spiked near $120 per barrel before falling back Monday as the Iran war intensified, threatening production and shipping in the Middle East and pummeling financial markets. The price for a barrel of Brent crude, the international standard, surged to $119.50 per barrel early in the day but later was trading at $107.80 per barrel. West Texas Intermediate, the...

Iran names Mojtaba Khamenei to succeed his father as supreme leader and Saudi sharpens warning

Iran names Mojtaba Khamenei to succeed his father as supreme leader and Saudi sharpens warning

Saudi Arabia sharpened its warnings to Iran early Monday, telling Tehran it would be the "biggest loser" if it continues to attack Arab states. The Saudi statement came after a new drone attack apparently targeted its massive Shaybah oil field. The kingdom dismissed comments by Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian on Saturday that Iran had halted its attacks on Gulf Arab...

Anand: U.S., Israel have 'no blank cheque' in Iran and are bound by international law

Anand: U.S., Israel have 'no blank cheque' in Iran and are bound by international law

The United States and Israel do not have a "blank cheque" in their bombing campaign in Iran, and are still bound by international law, Foreign Affairs Minister Anita Anand said on Friday, as the war in the Middle East approaches the seven-day mark.

Gulf allies complain US didn't notify them of Iran attacks and ignored their warnings, sources say

Gulf allies complain US didn't notify them of Iran attacks and ignored their warnings, sources say

The Trump administration is confronting mounting discontent from allies in the Persian Gulf who have complained they were not given adequate time to prepare for the torrent of Iranian drones and missiles bombarding their countries in retaliation for strikes launched by the U.S. and Israel. Officials from two Gulf countries said their governments were disappointed in the way the U.S...

Carney to cap Indo-Pacific trip with Tokyo visit focused on trade, security

Carney to cap Indo-Pacific trip with Tokyo visit focused on trade, security

Prime Minister Mark Carney is headed to Japan for a brief visit to one of Canada's closest partner countries as he wraps up a trip across the Indo-Pacific. "The trip is long overdue, given how significant Japan is as a partner for us in the region," Asia Pacific Foundation vice-president Vina Nadjibulla said in a recent interview. Japan is the...

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Rising Crime Eroding Trust

Rising Crime Eroding Trust

Canada’s criminal justice system is failing its most basic test: keeping the public safe. A new report from the Macdonald-Laurier Institute reveals rising crime, falling clearance rates, and a bail system widely seen as broken. The result is a struggling justice system increasingly derailed by delays and struggling to deliver safety or accountability – eroding the trust of the Canadians...

Supporting communities through layoffs and business closures: A comprehensive framework

Supporting communities through layoffs and business closures: A comprehensive framework

Canada’s economic landscape is profoundly changing. A shifting trade environment, global efforts to reduce emissions and other structural trends are reshaping industries and job requirements. With these shifts, opportunities arise, but so do uneven risks and impacts. Certain communities are disproportionately susceptible to the workforce disruption these changes will bring. In this Policy Brief, we focus on mass layoffs and...

Carney’s India Visit: From Reset to Results

Carney’s India Visit: From Reset to Results

A year ago, it was not obvious that Canada–India relations could be pulled back from the brink. Diplomatic expulsions, public recriminations, and allegations of foreign interference had frozen one of Canada’s most consequential Indo-Pacific partnerships. Yet since Prime Minister Mark Carney and Prime Minister Narendra Modi met on the margins of the G7 summit in Kananaskis last June, a different...


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A collection of SubStack publishing within Canadian public affairs.

Will Carney join Trump’s war on Iran?

Will Carney join Trump’s war on Iran?

For a moment there, it looked like Mark Carney would be the torchbearer for countries opposed to Trump’s big power politics. Now, not so much. In fact, it seems Prime Minister Carney is ready to embrace the “end of the international rules-based order” rather than oppose it – thanks to the confusing and contradictory statements by the Canadian government following...

Liberal government's addiction to secrecy

Liberal government's addiction to secrecy

On Thursday, the Liberal government finally got around to asking ordinary Canadians how to fix the country’s premier transparency law, the Access to Information Act. The Act, dating from 1983, empowers citizens to hold governments to account through requests for internal information.

The Age of Democracy is Over

The Age of Democracy is Over

Iranian Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei was a monster. For close to thirty years, he presided over a police state that violated human rights at home and exported terror to the world. Now he is dead, crushed by the American assault on Iran that flattened his compound and sparked a regional war. From Tehran to Toronto, thousands of Iranians are celebrating...

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A Reality Check with Iranian-Canadians

A Reality Check with Iranian-Canadians

Canada is home to one of the largest Iranian communities outside of Iran in the world. There are over 280,000 Iranian Canadians living here. The rallies they’ve held in recent months have been some of the largest that Canada has ever seen. According to the CBC last month, 350,000 people took to the streets in Toronto. And that was before...

What could Canadian involvement in Iran look like?

What could Canadian involvement in Iran look like?

In the immediate aftermath of the US-Israel strikes on Iran, Prime Minister Mark Carney came out with a declaration of support, which later developed into what he calls a 'regretful' position due to the lack of international order.

What is Canada's stance on Iran?

What is Canada's stance on Iran?

More than a week has passed since Israel and the United States launched a massive attack on Iran — a move the prime minister says Canada supports "with regret." How does that stance square with the vision Carney laid out in Davos? Former Canadian ambassador to the United Nations Bob Rae weighs in on the Canadian view and shares concerns...

‘Pace yourself for the long haul’: Jocelyne Bourgon joins The Hot Room

‘Pace yourself for the long haul’: Jocelyne Bourgon joins The Hot Room

Peter Mazereeuw speaks with Jocelyne Bourgon, a former clerk of the Privy Council who served as Jean Chrétien's right hand. They discuss Canada's move away from the United States, national unity, public service cuts, and Bourgon's new book, A Public Servant's Voice: Through the Words of the First Woman Clerk of the Privy Council of Canada.